Magnus Carlsen and Death of Chess Ideas

Where have ideas gone?

With giant technological advances, human abilities are being pushed to new heights.

Magnus Carlsen, the “hero of the computer era,” has found smart ways of how to use computers to become the world’s #1.[1] On the other hand, the top players are now those who most often play moves that chess engines would choose.[2]

Not everything is that rosy, however. Last time we saw how, amid the rise of technologism and scientism, all criteria for giving value to things have been replaced by quantification.

Today, let us discuss another hazardous by-product of computerization – a general scarcity of ideas.

Magnus Carlsen is just few steps away from reaching 2900 rating. But how about his style of play? Even GMs term his style as dry, a little flat, no freshness in it. His play is also embarrassingly short of original ideas. In this regard, he himself is candid enough, “Flashes of true inspiration are very hard to come by… it doesn’t happen very often, at least not with me.”

It is absolutely impossible for computers to produce ideas. People who think like machines, can’t do it either.

Some say, we may be the first generation in human history going backward intellectually from advanced mode of thinking (creativity, imagination, intuition, etc.) into computer “thinking.”[3]